Today is Selection Sunday, one of the greatest and most anticipated days of the year for sports fans across the country. There are just a few hours left before the Selection Show starts on CBS, when we all find out what the NCAA Tournament selection committee has hashed out in their meeting room this week in Indianapolis.

Below is Sporting News’ final Field of 68 projection. The differences between the resumes of bubble teams is negligible, but there are only 37 at-large spots available: Tennessee and Ole Miss are in, Middle Tennessee, Kentucky, Maryland and Virginia are out. Louisville and Kansas move to the No. 1-seed line with conference tournament championships—and otherwise stellar resumes, of course—and Gonzaga drops down to the No. 2-seed line.

Automatic bids are given to conference champs, or the highest remaining seed in the conference tournament (SEC, ACC, Big Ten and A-10).

1. Louisville (Big East), Indiana, Duke, Kansas (Big 12)

LOUISVILLE—Record: 29-5, 14-4 Big East. Rankings: RPI 3, Pomeroy 2. Best foot forward: 10-4 vs. RPI top 50. Tied for Big East regular-season title, won conference tournament. Road wins at Syracuse, Memphis and Connecticut. Yeah, but ... Just 4-3 vs. RPI top 25 (and that’s pretty good; had to find something). Random note: After a rough patch midway through the Big East season, the Cardinals won 10 of their last 11 conference games and then swept through the Big East Tournament to shoot back into the conversation about the No. 1 overall seed.

INDIANA—Record: 27-6, 14-4 Big Ten. Rankings: RPI 8, Pomeroy 3. Best foot forward: Won Big Ten regular season title. 7-2 vs. RPI top 25, including sweeps of Michigan and Michigan State, and non-conference wins vs. Georgetown and North Carolina. Yeah, but ... The Hoosiers were swept by Wisconsin and lost three of their final six games this season. Random note: No team has more at stake when it comes to the No. 1 overall seed; the Hoosiers could have locked up the Indianapolis region with a strong finish. Now, though, there’s definitely a chance that Louisville could steal that site.

DUKE—Record: 27-5, 14-4 ACC. Rankings: RPI 1, Pomeroy 5. Best foot forward: No. 1 overall and non-conference SOS (RPI). 6-1 vs. RPI top 25, 9-2 vs. top 50. 18-1 with Ryan Kelly, including non-con wins against Louisville, Ohio State and VCU. Yeah, but ... Duke didn’t win the ACC regular-season or tournament title. Just 5-4 in true road games. Lost twice to Maryland. Random note: When determining the No. 1 seeds, the selection committee won’t ignore those six RPI top 25 wins, especially when three of them were against non-conference foes (only one at Cameron). The loss to Maryland in the ACC Tournament quarterfinals was by far the Blue Devils’ worst game with Kelly.

KANSAS—Record: 29-5, 14-4 Big 12. Rankings: RPI 5, Pomeroy 8. Best foot forward: 6-1 vs. RPI top 25 and 13-3 vs. RPI top 50. Non-con wins at Ohio State, vs. Saint Louis, Colorado, Belmont, Temple. Swept three games from Iowa State and Kansas State, including the Big 12 Tournament championship. Yeah, but ... Worst loss for any contender for a top seed, at TCU (RPI 234). Random note: The Jayhawks obviously were awful at TCU and didn’t look much better in the regular-season finale at Baylor (23-point loss), but this team otherwise has a dynamite resume—13 wins vs. top 50 teams should be enough for the committee to excuse the slipups and put Kansas on the top line

GONZAGA—Record: 30-2, 16-0 West Coast. Rankings: RPI 7, Pomeroy 4. Best foot forward: Best record in basketball. non-conference strength of schedule of 41 (RPI), including wins vs. three Big 12 tournament-bound teams (Kansas State, Oklahoma State, Oklahoma), plus a bubble team in Baylor. Yeah, but ... Conference doesn’t offer anything in the way of elite-win opportunities. The Zags have played just one tournament lock (Butler) since the calendar flipped to 2013. Random note: With Louisville winning the Big East Tournament and Kansas winning the Big 12, the Zags’ relatively thin case for a No. 1 seed (just 1-1 vs. RPI top 25, 6-2 vs. top 50) was knocked down another peg or two.

3. Ohio State (Big Ten), Florida, Michigan, Michigan State

OHIO STATE—Record: 25-7, 13-5 in Big Ten. Rankings: RPI 11, Pomeroy 6. Best foot forward: Elite road win at Indiana, two wins vs. Michigan State (home/neutral). Yeah, but ... Aside from the Indiana win, the Buckeyes were 0-5 against RPI top 50 teams on the road. Just 4-5 vs. RPI top 25 teams. Random note: Ohio State closed the season as well as any team in the country, winning five in a row (including at Indiana, vs. Michigan State and vs. Illinois), then rolling into the Big Ten Tournament title game.

FLORIDA—Record: 26-6, 14-4 SEC. Rankings: RPI 6, Pomeroy 1. Best foot forward: Elite non-conference strength of schedule (RPI 8). Crushed Marquette, Wisconsin and Middle Tennessee in non-con portion of the schedule. Yeah, but ... The Gators have played five teams with an RPI of 58 or better away from home, and they’ve lost all five. And that doesn’t count the 11-point loss at Arkansas. Random note: The Gators present an interesting case to the selection committee. Their computer numbers are excellent, but almost everything they’ve accomplished this season has been in Gainesville. Anywhere from a 2 to a 4 seed is possible.

MICHIGAN—Record: 25-7, 12-6 Big Ten. Rankings: RPI 17, Pomeroy 11. Best foot forward: Eight wins vs. RPI top 50 teams, including neutral-site wins vs. Pitt and Kansas State. Yeah, but ... Awful non-conference strength of schedule (RPI 207) and resume-staining road loss at Penn State (RPI 183), which was previously winless in the conference. Random note: If that last-second shot had fallen in the regular-season finale vs. Indiana, the Wolverines would have had an outside shot at a No. 1 seed with a good showing in the Big Ten Tournament. But the shot missed, and then they lost to Wisconsin in the second round. A four is worst-case scenario, but it seems likely.

MICHIGAN STATE—Record: 24-8, 13-5 Big Ten. Rankings: RPI 9, Pomeroy 10. Best foot forward: Overall SOS is 4 (RPI), eight wins vs. RPI top 50 teams. “Worst” loss is to RPI 48 UConn. Yeah, but ... Just 3-6 vs. RPI top 25 teams. Only won one road game vs. NCAA-bound conference foe (Wisconsin). Random note: Any shot of a No. 1 seed (and probably a No. 2, too) disappeared with the loss to Ohio State in the Big Ten Tournament. The Spartans needed to impress the committee in that setting.

MARQUETTE—Record: 23-8, 14-4 Big East. Rankings: RPI 12, Pomeroy 25. Best foot forward: Seven RPI top 50 wins, tied for Big East regular-season title. Swept Pitt. Yeah, but ... That two-point December loss at Green Bay (RPI 161) is the primary blemish. Random note: Marquette closed the regular season by winning six of seven, including victories against Pitt, Syracuse and Notre Dame, but lost Big East Tournament opener vs. Notre Dame. The cancelled aircraft carrier game against Ohio State in November robbed Marquette of an opportunity for a big non-conference win.

SAINT LOUIS—Record: 26-6, 13-3 A-10. Rankings: RPI 20, Pomeroy 17. Best foot forward: Won outright A-10 regular-season title. Dominating home wins against New Mexico and VCU, swept three games from Butler. Yeah, but ... That home loss to Rhode Island (RPI 200) is ugly. Random note: Butler coach Brad Stevens said this after his team lost to the Billikens in the A-10 Tournament: “I've said all year to the people that have listened, and some that don't, how good they are. They are a legitimate contender for the whole thing. I believe that wholeheartedly.”

SYRACUSE—Record: 26-9, 11-7 Big East. Rankings: RPI 13, Pomeroy 13. Best foot forward: Elite road win at Louisville, neutral win vs. Georgetown in Big East Tournament semifinals. Yeah, but ... Just 2-5 vs. RPI top 25, 6-8 vs. RPI top 50. Random note: The Orange stumbled badly down the stretch, losing three of four before being blown out at Georgetown in the regular-season finale. Beating Pitt and Georgetown in the Big East Tournament helped mitigate some of that damage, though.